Notes: Representation of Geographical Features
Easy Explanation - Class 7 Geography
1. Why Do We Need Maps and Symbols?
Simple point: The Earth is huge. We can't draw it full size on paper. So we make maps.
- Map = A small drawing of the Earth that gives us info about places.
- But we can't draw real mountains, rivers, or houses on a map. There isn’t enough space.
- Solution: We use Symbols and Signs. Every symbol has a fixed meaning.
- Example: Anamika’s father was an architect. He also made maps of a shopping mall using symbols. Geography does the same thing.
History Point: The Greeks were the first to use maths for map-making. Anaximander believed the Earth was cylindrical and made a world map.
2. What is a Topographical Map?
Topo Map = The most detailed map of the Earth
- Who makes it: Survey of India makes these maps.
- Scale: Mostly
1 : 50,000scale is used. That means 1 cm on the map = 50,000 cm on the ground = 500 m = 0.5 km - What it shows: 2 types of features
- Natural: Mountains, rivers, forests - made by nature
- Man-made: Roads, bridges, dams, houses - made by humans
- It is 2D: Shows length and width, not height. But contours give an idea of height.
DID YOU KNOW: Mount Everest is named after Colonel Sir George Everest. He was Surveyor General of India from 1830 to 1843.
3. How to Find Places on a Topo Map? Grid System
A map has a net of straight lines. This is called a Grid.
- There are 2 Axes:
- X-axis = Horizontal = Goes from Left to Right
- Y-axis = Vertical = Goes from Bottom to Top
- Rule: Always write the X number first, then Y. Like (79, 86)
- Benefit: You can tell the exact location of any well, temple, or bridge.
4. What Do Colours Mean on a Topo Sheet?
Topo maps "talk" through colours. Each colour has its own language:
| Colour | What it Shows | Trick to Remember |
|---|---|---|
| Black | Names, boundaries, railway, phone lines | "Black = Basic info" |
| Blue | Water - rivers, ponds, wells, seas | "Blue = B for Blue water" |
| Green | Forests, trees, orchards | "Green = Grass/Trees" |
| Yellow | Cultivated area / farmland | "Yellow = Yellow mustard fields" |
| Brown | Contours, height, sand dunes | "Brown = Bhoomi/Soil" |
| Red | Settlements, roads, buildings | "Red = Residential areas" |
5. How to Measure Distance on a Map? Scale
A map is small, the Earth is big. So we need to show the ratio between map and Earth. This is called Scale.
3 Types of Scale:
- Statement Scale / Verbal Scale
- Written in words.
- Ex:
2 cm : 7 kmmeans 2 cm on map = 7 km on ground
- Representative Fraction (R.F.)
- Written as a fraction. No units are written.
- Formula:
R.F. = Map Distance / Ground Distance - Ex:
1 : 50,000means 1 unit on map = 50,000 units on ground - Converting:
1 cm : 5,00,000 cm→ in metres =1 cm : 5,000 m=1 cm : 5 km
- Graphic / Linear Scale
- A scale bar drawn on the map, like a ruler.
- Best one: Even if the map is photocopied and size changes, this scale stays correct.
- Parts: Primary Divisions and Secondary Divisions
Map Distance vs Ground Distance
- Map Distance: Distance measured with a ruler in cm.
- Ground Distance: Real distance on Earth in km.
6. Two Ways to Measure Distance on a Map
- Straight-line Distance = Direct Distance
- Measure with a ruler. A straight line between two points.
- Use: For aeroplane routes.
- Steps: Place ruler → measure cm → convert to km using scale.
- Curved-line Distance = Indirect Distance
- For winding paths like roads or rivers.
- How to measure: Use a thread or an Opisometer.
- Steps: Place thread along the path → straighten it and measure with ruler → convert to km using scale.
7. Conventional Signs and Symbols
We don’t draw real objects on maps. We use standard signs that are same all over the world.
Why needed:
- Saves space.
- Everyone understands them, no language problem.
- Key/Legend on the map explains all signs.
Some Important Signs:
= =→ Metalled Road- - -→ Unmetalled Road+-+-+→ Railway line⏊⏊→ Temple✝→ Church+→ HospitalPO→ Post Office●→ Well△→ Triangulated Height
Quick Revision - Remember in 1 Min
- Topo Map = Made by Survey of India, 1:50,000 scale, shows natural + man-made features.
- Colours: Blue=Water, Green=Forest, Yellow=Farms, Brown=Height, Red=Settlement, Black=Names.
- 3 Types of Scale: Statement, R.F., Graphic. Graphic is most reliable.
- R.F. Formula:
Map Distance / Ground Distance. Never write units. - Distance: Straight = Ruler, Curved = Thread/Opisometer.
- Grid: X first, then Y. Used to locate places.
- Symbols: Check the Key/Legend. Same symbols are used worldwide.
Tip: Look at a topo sheet carefully. The colour that covers the most area tells you what’s common there. If there’s more Yellow = it’s a farming area.
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